Simple Machines Forum(SMF), one of the top free open Source forum software, has revealed that its official website was compromised by intruders on the 20th of July.

Hacker compromised one of the admins account password that allowed him to gain access to the database server which contains the users' data.

SMF admitted that user data has been compromised by saying "we are 100% sure that our user database has been stolen". The stolen data includes password, personal messages and other info.

"This is !!NOT!! a security issue with the SMF software. If you are running the latest SMF version you have nothing to fear from this hack if you use different passwords." SMF said in their community page.

Users are urged to change the passwords. If you have used the same password anywhere else, it is recommended to change the password there also.

Secret data crucial to securing online banking and shopping can be lifted from an HTTPS channel in as little as 30 seconds, we're told.

BREACH (short for Browser Reconnaissance and Exfiltration via Adaptive Compression of Hypertext)attacks the common Deflate data compression algorithm used to save bandwidth in web communications. The exploit is a development of the earlier Compression Ratio Info-leak Made Easy (CRIME) exploit, which also involved turning compression of encrypted web requests against users.

The code-breaking research behind BREACH was unveiled by security researchers Angelo Prado, Neal Harris and Yoel Gluck during a presentation at the Black Hat hacking conference in Las Vegas on Thursday.

All versions of TLS/SSL are at risk from BREACH regardless of the encryption algorithm or cipher that's in play, the trio said.

The attacker just has to continually eavesdrop on the encrypted traffic between a victim and a web server before tricking marks into visiting a website under the miscreant's control.

The attacker's booby-trapped website hosts a script that runs the second phase of the attack: this forces the victim's browser to visit the targeted website thousands of times, over and over, each time appending a different combination of extra data. When the attacker-controlled bytes match any bytes originally encrypted in the stream, the browser's compression kicks in and reduces the size of the transmission, a subtle change the eavesdropper can detect.

This data leakage - a type of Oracle attack - means an eavesdropper can gradually piece together an email address or security token in a HTTPS exchange, byte by byte, using a technique akin to a high-tech game of Battleships. The time needed to perform a successful attack, and how many requests need to be sent, is dependant of the size of the secret information attackers are targeting, Ars Technica notes.

The leaked data provides enough clues to decrypt a user's supposedly protected cookies or other targeted content. The recovery of secret authentication cookies open the door for attackers to pose as their victims and hijack authenticated web sessions, among other attacks, the British Computer Society (BCS) notes in a blog post.

The practical upshot is that tokens and other sensitive information sent over SSL connections could be lifted even though the encrypted contents of emails and one-off orders sent to e-commerce websites are beyond the scope of the attack. Prado, Harris and Gluck released tools to test whether websites are vulnerable to BREACH, as well as techniques to defend against the exploit during their presentation at Black Hat.Not so lucky

BREACH is the latest in a growing list of attacks against HTTPS encryption, the internet's gold standard for secure communication, following attacks such as CRIME, BEAST, Lucky 13 and others.

During a debate at Black Hat, security researchers expressed fears that over the medium term algorithms such as RSA and Diffie-Hellman will be weakened or broken as a result of advances in crypto-analysis as well as the development of attacks such as BREACH.

“There’s a small, but definite chance that RSA and non-ECC Diffie-Hellman will not be usable for security purposes within two to five years,” said Alex Stamos of Artemis Internet, a division of iSEC Partners. “We’re not saying this is definite," he added.

Kaspersky Lab's Threatpost blog has more on the debate here. Stamos is not alone in looking forward towards the end of life of cryptographic tools and techniques that have served us well but are increasing showing their age. The RSA algorithm is about to turn 40, for example.